I've Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level
Título original: Slime Taoshite 300-nen, Shiranai Uchi ni Level MAX ni Nattemashita
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
1,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAzusa Aizawa, a 27 years old woman, died on work site due to overworking. She has the possibility to reincarnate, and so she plans to live a chilling and calm life. But will she be able to b... Ler tudoAzusa Aizawa, a 27 years old woman, died on work site due to overworking. She has the possibility to reincarnate, and so she plans to live a chilling and calm life. But will she be able to be relaxed?Azusa Aizawa, a 27 years old woman, died on work site due to overworking. She has the possibility to reincarnate, and so she plans to live a chilling and calm life. But will she be able to be relaxed?
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Avaliações em destaque
I thought this show would have at least a 7.5 rating! It ended on the day I am reviewing this, and I can honestly say that I enjoyed each and every episode in this show. In some moe shows, it just gets boring after a while, but even after watching it 12 weeks in a row I still really liked it. There were funny jokes, fun adventures, and a great cast of characters! Sure, this show isn't too deep, but that's not the point. This is a show that you can watch anytime, anywhere, and it makes you happy no matter what. It's almost impossible not to be happy watching it. Out of the around 12 different anime I watched every week during the spring anime season, this was in the top 4 of the ones I looked the most forward to. I have no idea who is rating this show so low, and I would like to have a word with them. Please give it a try!
Azusa Aizawa is a hard working office worker; at least she was until she died of overwork. She is reincarnated as an immortal witch, and determines to take life easy this time. She makes a basic living doing as little as possible; this involves killing a few slimes each day. They may be the weakest creatures in the land but after doing this for three hundred years she gains amazing powers... greater than any adventurer. When others learn just how powerful she is she gets a lot more attention. This includes a dragon who challenges her. Azusa defeats the dragon, who returns in the form of a young girl named Laika who asks to be her apprentice. This is just the first addition to Azusa's household; there will be plenty more before the series is over.
I rather enjoyed this series; there may have been a lot of Isekai series lately but that isn't a problem when quite a few of them have been pretty good. This one has a fairly gentle pace but it still has some enjoyable action; which often leads to a threat becoming a new friend. The characters are likeable so it is fun to spend time with them. I can't recall any material viewers might find offensive; there is some mild fan service but not too much, and even then it is played for laughs. Overall I'd certainly recommend this to any anime fan wanting something relaxing to watch.
These comments are based on watching the series in Japanese with English subtitles.
I rather enjoyed this series; there may have been a lot of Isekai series lately but that isn't a problem when quite a few of them have been pretty good. This one has a fairly gentle pace but it still has some enjoyable action; which often leads to a threat becoming a new friend. The characters are likeable so it is fun to spend time with them. I can't recall any material viewers might find offensive; there is some mild fan service but not too much, and even then it is played for laughs. Overall I'd certainly recommend this to any anime fan wanting something relaxing to watch.
These comments are based on watching the series in Japanese with English subtitles.
I'm generally not a fan of isekai. Series with characters from our world reincarnated in a fantastical world or transported there are often quite dull. But sometimes there's a gem among them, like "Solo Leveling" recently. I then hope that other formats also contain such a gem.
"I've Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level" (what a cumbersome title) is not one of those good series. The stories, which span 24 episodes over two seasons, are primitively simple. You might think they're aimed at a child audience in their simplicity, but the recurring "fan service" (more on that below), a drunk, and a certain amount of violence (albeit never exceeding comic book violence) speak against this. It's meant so seriously and is definitely aimed at both, young adult and adult audiences. Yet there's no conflict. Everything is happily resolved after a few minutes. The solutions are simple, or the protagonist simply uses her overwhelming power. The first season actually consists only of the former loner acquiring a "family," or should we say a zoo? Humanoid dragons, slime spirits, a ghost, an elf, plus friends among demons, goddesses, nature spirits, undead, and so on. At some point, the cast became so vast (and they all came back again and again) that no character could possibly develop a deeper story. If a character did develop a negative, even deep feeling like hatred, it was always resolved after a few words (or a fight). The world in which the protagonist and her Harum/zoo lived was never explained in detail. How it worked, who ultimately lived there. We didn't learn anything beyond the few places and moments where we interacted with this world. But this was always at such a low level of information that we barely knew more afterward than before, just a few new characters.
Technically, it's not much quality either. The character design is still somewhat decent, even if many of the characters seem rather boring and carelessly created. The cheap nature of the production was quickly apparent in the fact that an incredible number of scenes consisted of filmed stills. But even when there was movement, it often seemed clunky. There were clearly not too many intercutting frames. It didn't end with the animation, though. The sound design is also really bad. It happened quite often that images suggested loud noises, but silence prevailed. Sounds were often too quiet, as were the vocal interludes.
Maybe I'm just the wrong target audience. Perhaps the series isn't intended for men at all. Men don't appear that well anyway. Unless they were shown as perverts, debauchers, or violent criminals in a few appearances, they were merely "background noise." To be honest, so were almost all human women. Why, then, the almost exclusively underage female protagonists are repeatedly portrayed in a sexualized form - I don't know. I can't imagine that the female audience likes that. Showing off "big boobs" or being as "kawaii" as possible. That can't be it. Even if the fan service was comparatively "subtle," meaning it fortunately had some graphic and verbal boundaries, it still gave me a stomach ache every now and then. It often went well beyond the typical lolicon innuendo. The fact that there are the usual bathing scenes on the beach and the attempts to knead the breasts of the "better-endowed" young ladies can be classified as "self-evident."
The low point was episode 2.7, in which the main character's (adopted) twin daughters hold a wedding ceremony. Mind you, they marry each other. What kind of sick mind comes up with something like that? There are really many good anime series that end after the standard 12 episodes of a season despite having a lot of potential. Why this really bad one got a second season - I don't understand.
"I've Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level" (what a cumbersome title) is not one of those good series. The stories, which span 24 episodes over two seasons, are primitively simple. You might think they're aimed at a child audience in their simplicity, but the recurring "fan service" (more on that below), a drunk, and a certain amount of violence (albeit never exceeding comic book violence) speak against this. It's meant so seriously and is definitely aimed at both, young adult and adult audiences. Yet there's no conflict. Everything is happily resolved after a few minutes. The solutions are simple, or the protagonist simply uses her overwhelming power. The first season actually consists only of the former loner acquiring a "family," or should we say a zoo? Humanoid dragons, slime spirits, a ghost, an elf, plus friends among demons, goddesses, nature spirits, undead, and so on. At some point, the cast became so vast (and they all came back again and again) that no character could possibly develop a deeper story. If a character did develop a negative, even deep feeling like hatred, it was always resolved after a few words (or a fight). The world in which the protagonist and her Harum/zoo lived was never explained in detail. How it worked, who ultimately lived there. We didn't learn anything beyond the few places and moments where we interacted with this world. But this was always at such a low level of information that we barely knew more afterward than before, just a few new characters.
Technically, it's not much quality either. The character design is still somewhat decent, even if many of the characters seem rather boring and carelessly created. The cheap nature of the production was quickly apparent in the fact that an incredible number of scenes consisted of filmed stills. But even when there was movement, it often seemed clunky. There were clearly not too many intercutting frames. It didn't end with the animation, though. The sound design is also really bad. It happened quite often that images suggested loud noises, but silence prevailed. Sounds were often too quiet, as were the vocal interludes.
Maybe I'm just the wrong target audience. Perhaps the series isn't intended for men at all. Men don't appear that well anyway. Unless they were shown as perverts, debauchers, or violent criminals in a few appearances, they were merely "background noise." To be honest, so were almost all human women. Why, then, the almost exclusively underage female protagonists are repeatedly portrayed in a sexualized form - I don't know. I can't imagine that the female audience likes that. Showing off "big boobs" or being as "kawaii" as possible. That can't be it. Even if the fan service was comparatively "subtle," meaning it fortunately had some graphic and verbal boundaries, it still gave me a stomach ache every now and then. It often went well beyond the typical lolicon innuendo. The fact that there are the usual bathing scenes on the beach and the attempts to knead the breasts of the "better-endowed" young ladies can be classified as "self-evident."
The low point was episode 2.7, in which the main character's (adopted) twin daughters hold a wedding ceremony. Mind you, they marry each other. What kind of sick mind comes up with something like that? There are really many good anime series that end after the standard 12 episodes of a season despite having a lot of potential. Why this really bad one got a second season - I don't understand.
There is no annoying behaviour scenes or episodes. All 12 episodes are decent. Peaceful anime.
Fun, cute and very light. Great show to watch when you want to have a break from darker climates. Only issue I had with it is ep 10 and how they approached the topic of Kuku's singing.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAzusa's looks didn't change much when she was reincarnated; her face is still the same, but her eye and hair color are different.
- ConexõesReferenced in Trash Taste After Dark: Reacting to The Anime Awards (2021)
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Slime 300
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração24 minutos
- Cor
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